A lot of American films and TV shows were produced at 24fps, though, and for the NTSC releases the codec will typically store 24fps and the DVD player will then use a pulldown technique to interlace the picture for display at 30fps in its original speed, which can make playback a little jerky but all of the original frames will be there without interlacing if you pause and manually scan through each frame. This I believe is down to the differences in frame rate - NTSC is 30fps while PAL is 25fps. Please don't sue us.Something that annoys me about British, European and Australian (PAL) DVD releases of US films and TV shows would be that they are almost always sped up by 4% compared to how they are on the US (NTSC) equivelant releases. We ❤️ Star Wars and give it all the moneys. All Star Wars content, images, and likenesses are the property of their respective copyright owner. is not affiliated with Lucasfilm, 20th Century Fox, or Disney. Site content Copyright © 2003-2023 TEH Innernets LLC. If you have a good computer system you can bang this out in about 30 minutes start to finish.Ħ4,305 members have started 23,368 topics with 1,155,445 posts since March 10, 2003 Premier is usually available for a free 30 day, full trial. Then change the playback rate to 96% (there is a checkbox option for audio pitch, I believe checking it maintains PAL pitch, I would only check this if your PAL source was already pitch corrected) Premier by default is going to assume NTSC frame rates, so you’ll want to make sure it’s either detected 25fps on the source or manually set it to that. Load the file in and click on interpret - assume frame rate 25. You can do it in adobe premier pretty easily. I heard that meGUI also works for stuff like that but I don’t think I’ll need the DVD audio after all if I can get better audio from the blu-ray. I’m gonna have to edit the special edition DVD to match the theatrical blu-ray to find out. That worked like a charm, thank you! Last time I tried that with the audio it stuffed up the video. I think eac3to should be able to take the audio from your PAL video and convert it to NTSC speed (lowering the pitch to its correct…uh, pitch in the process), but I don’t know the command offhand for that and also don’t know if that’s available for Mac.Īuthor darksteel1335 Time 2 2:06 AM (Edited) Post link Whether that will easily sync to the NTSC 4.1 once you have the file running at the right speed is a different story. Plus, mkvtoolnix won’t reencode the video, just change the frame rate flags. ID in the original source medium : 189 (0xBD)128 (0x80)Īuthor ChainsawAsh Time 2 11:26 PM (Edited) Post linkĮasiest way I can think of is to rip the disc to an MKV file, then load that into mkvtoolnix and change the framerate in that to 23.976 and render out a new video-only MKV - this will only really work for the video, but it’ll actually change the frame rate the video file is played at, as opposed to Handbrake, which will try to interpolate (blend existing/create new) frames to preserve the speed and runtime of the original. Time code source : Group of pictures header ID in the original source medium : 224 (0圎0)įormat profile : settings : CustomMatrix / BVOP Writing application : MakeMKV v1.14.3 darwin(圆4-release) Thanks in advance for any help with making this a reality.Īuthor darksteel1335 Time 2 10:34 PM Post linkĬomplete name : Aliens (1986). My eventual goal is to try to colour match the DVD to the blu-ray but I’ll settle for this for now. I am using Mac so any solution for that would be preferable, I can use Windows as a last resort but it’s been 10 years since I used it regularly. When converting from 25 FPS to 23.97 FPS, the runtime should go from 2hr 28min to 2hr 34min because PAL is sped up 4%.
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